2008-030 DRUG CONJUGATED MAGNETONANOPARTICLES FOR VISUALIZATION OF NEOPLASM (ONCOLOGY), CARDIAC IMAGING AND NEUROLOGICAL DISEASES AND DISORDERS...

Case No. 2008-030

 

SUMMARY

Researchers at the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior have developed magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) functionalized with deoxyglucose that can be used as tissue-specific contrast agents for MRI. These novel MNPs can help physicians and researchers to differentiate neoplastic, epileptic, parkinsonian, or Alzheimer tissues from normal tissue based on the metabolic activity of the tissue.

 

BACKGROUND

A number of imaging techniques are currently used to diagnose, stage, and monitor neurological disorders and tumors, but each available technique has major drawbacks and limitations. For example, electroencephalograms (electric) and magnetoencephalogram (magnetic) are only sensitive to sources that are up to a few centimeters below the scalp surface and cannot detect epileptic sources of activity that are deeper in the brain parenchyma. Also, these methods rely on the presence of ictal or interictal activity, which may not be present at the time of recording. Electrocorticogram and depth-implanted electrodes, which are two additional electric-based detection techniques are invasive surgical techniques of considerable cost and cause discomfort in patients. For tumor detection and grading, radioactive techniques, such as positron emission tomography (PET), PET-CT, and single photon emission computed tomography, are often used. These techniques require radioactive substances that have short half-life times, are not widely available, and are limited in their usefulness as diagnostic techniques. Thus, a non-invasive method that allows for the accurate, high-contrast differentiation between disease tissue from (either cancer or neurological disorders) normal tissue would be greatly beneficial to patients and healthcare professionals.

 

INNOVATION

Researchers at UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior have developed magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) that have been functionalized and can be injected into the blood stream of a patient to differentiate anatomically and functionally, neoplastic, epileptic, parkinsonian, or Alzheimer tissues from normal tissue on MRI scans. This technology acts as a tissue-specific contrast agent for MRI that allows physicians and researchers to image normal and disease tissue based on their levels of metabolic and functional activity in order to supplement their diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment plan for the patient. The MNPs are designed to pass the blood brain barrier, which allows for imaging of the central nervous system, and have a long half-life, which makes it feasible to monitor development and progression of tissue changes over time without the need for renewed administration of the imaging agent. Further, disease-specific MNP derivatives have been produced by attaching additional functional groups, such as other single molecules, antibodies, carbohydrates, and polypeptides. The additional attachments could provide more specific tissue targeting or aid in treating the patient’s condition. For example, MNPs equipped with levodopa, or L-DOPA, could be used to diagnose and aid in treatment of patients with Parkinson’s disease.

 

APPLICATIONS

Differentiating normal tissue from diseased tissue by MRI

Grading the stage of cancer or other disease

Guiding physician decisions about treatment

Tracking efficiency of treatment (e.g. monitoring tumor progression and size)

Predicting the likelihood that a given individual will develop or is at risk for a disease

Targeted drug therapy

Attaching additional moieties for targeted therapeutics

Particles could be modified to be compatible with computed tomography (CT) or PET scans

Research applications  (e.g. monitoring brain tissue while testing the effect of various external and internal stimuli)

 

ADVANTAGES

Direct method to detect and image metabolically active (or inactive) tissues 

Can cross the blood brain barrier

Long half-life (hours to days)

Long shelf-life (6-12 months)

Non-invasive and safe

No surgery required

No radioactive tracers required

MRI equipment is already widely available in hospitals and clinics

Could provide validated, targeted treatment (has the ability to monitor that the drug is delivered)

 

STATE OF DEVELOPMENT

The inventors have generated glucose-conjugated as well as over a a dozen other distinct -conjugated MNPs, and have used them to detect glioma, medulloblastoma, lung and colon cancers, Parkinson and Alzheimer diseases, and localize epilepsy in animal models.

 

RELATED MATERIALS

Akhtari M, Bragin A, Cohen M, et al. Functionalized magnetonanoparticles for MRI diagnosis and localization in epilepsy. Epilepsia. 2008;49(8):1419-30.

Akhtari M, Bragin A, Moats R, Frew A, Mandelkern M. Imaging brain neuronal activity using functionalized magnetonanoparticles and MRI. Brain Topogr. 2012;25(4):374-88.

Akhtari M, Pope W, Mathern G, Moats R, Frew A, Mandelkern M. Functionalized magnetonanoparticles in visualization of intracranial tumors on MRI. Mol Imaging Biol. 2013;15(3):299-306.

Patent Information:
For More Information:
Earl Weinstein
Associate Director of Business Development
eweinstein@tdg.ucla.edu
Inventors:
Massoud Akhtari
Jerome Engel